8/31/08

Homily for the Twenty-second Sunday in Ordinary TimeJeremiah 20:7-9Romans 12:1-2Matthew 16:21-27This is a difficult weekend for preachers.Not only because of the hard sayings in today’s scripture,but also because of the contemporary cultural contextin which we hear them.

Over the past week the presidential and vice-presidential candidateshave promised us more in the next four yearsthan Jesus promises us in eternity:- lower taxes, money in our bank accounts- the cure for all diseases- justice and equality for all- and world peace!

By contrast, if Jesus were running for president:his platform would be - the Cross.And he wouldn’t be promising to take it away from us.Instead, he’d be inviting us to pick it up, and carry itand while we’re carrying it,to take care not to conform ourselves to the culture around us.

Instead, he would invite us to a renewal of our minds,so that we can see more clearly what is good, true, just- and pleasing to God.

If this sounds like a hard line – it’s because it is a hard line.- and not one we necessarily want to hear.Peter didn’t want to hear it.When Jesus spoke to him about the Cross,Peter pulled him aside and told him,“Hey! Ease up on that stuff: it’s not what people want to hear!”

Jeremiah didn’t want to hear it either.The people of his time had forgotten God,conforming themselves to the culture and its idols.Jeremiah, a faithful prophet, railed against this.And his reward?He became an object of derision, mockery and scorn.And so he cries out,“You duped me, Lord! And I let myself be duped!”

Sometimes we’re react like Jeremiah and Peter.We expect that in return for being faithful,good things and good times will come our way,and when they don’t, we might feel duped by God –or at least confused and disappointed.

Jesus himself might have laid claim to such feelings.He faithfully preached the kingdom of his Father’s mercy –and what was his reward? The Cross.

It’s amazing that we who claim to want to follow Christ are surprisedwhen the path we walk turns out to be the way of the Cross.

Our attention will be captured for the next two months by the electionand the decisions we, as voters, will be making.Today’s scriptures might prompt a few questions…

- How do I walk the path of Christ,faithful to the truth of the Cross,as I make our way towards November 4th?

- As I study social issues and concerns facing the nation and the world,how have I been conformed to this age and its morality?Do I have a solid grasp of what is truly good?What cultural realities have seduced me?How might my heart and mind be in need of renewal?

- As I listen to opposing parties and candidates arguing for my support,how do I discern the truth in what I hear and read?How do I discern between what is false and what is true?Do I know what’s pleasing to God? And if I do –what difference does that make in my political choices?

- Even the money in my pockets reminds me that We Trust in God.How will my trust in God shape my decisions on November 4th?

If you read in any of the above some hint of who I'll vote for,please let me know - because I don't know yet myself!

The only platform I'm pushing here is the platform of the Cross.The Cross is the platform of God’s truth and we are called,each of us, to live by that truth.

We began our prayer this morning by tracing on ourselvesthe sign of the Cross,marking our bodies as offerings for spiritual worship.God’s word is proclaimed at the foot of the Crossand its shadow hovers over the table of Eucharist.May our Communion we share in this bread and cupbe food for the renewal of our minds and heartsthat our choices and decisions might be good and pleasingin the eyes of God.

5 comments:

I went to the 5 PM so I didn't hear you give your homily. I just had a chance to read it and I hope and pray that you didn't mean that you don't know yet who you will vote for. My faith is truly shaken.

Are you thinking about becoming a Catholic?

The best place to start is always one of your local Catholic churches. Drop in some Sunday and see what's going on. Then you might speak to the pastor or someone on the parish staff about how they can help you and respond to your questions.